The cache is at the above coordinates!
Cache Across Southern California 2026

Greetings gamers! Are you ready to explore video games through the ages? Find and locate one of the roughly 50 CASC geocaches across all 10 Southern California counties. As you find geocaches, you may stamp your passport to track your progress and turn it in at Signal's Island in San Diego to redeem your prize(s)!
Do not remove the stamp from the container, it is part of this geocache!
How do I use the CASC Passport?
Use the stamp in each CASC geocache and stamp any of the 25 small game tokens on the front page of the passport. At the bottom of each coin, write the GC code of the geocache that corresponds to the stamp provided. Then on the reverse side, circle or highlight the caches you found from the list. Doing these steps will increase efficiency and line management at Signal's Island.
CASC Prize Redemption
To qualify for prize redemption you must bring your completed passport to Signal's Island Goes M*A*S*H (GCBGC72) in San Diego on Saturday, October 3rd 2026. There are two award packages being offered: Silver and Gold. For the SILVER award, you must find at least 10 CASC geocaches in 3 counties. To qualify for the GOLD award, you must find at least 25 CASC geocaches in all 10 counties. Silver award includes a small geocaching goodie bag, but Gold award includes a complimentary CASC 2026 geocoin + the silver award prize. Only one prize package per qualifying account. Prize distribution will be on a first come first served basis.
Sharing your progress
Feel free to share and post your progress on the official CASC Facebook group. Important announcements will be periodically added here as well.
I want to hide a CASC Geocache!
Interested in becoming a CASC sponsor for next year? Join the official CASC Facebook group and watch for an interest post sometime in Fall 2026.
Whac-A-Mole

Whac-A-Mole (often spelled Whack-A-Mole) is a classic arcade redemption game where players use a soft mallet to hit plastic moles as they pop up randomly from holes in a cabinet. it is a popular carnival game designed to test reflexes, focus, and hand-eye coordination for one to four players. Invented in Japan in 1975 as Mogura Taiji ("Mole Buster"), it was brought to the U.S. in 1976 and became a staple of carnivals and amusement parks worldwide.

This cache was hidden in preparation for Signal's Island.